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Research Publication

40,000-Year-Old Individual from Asia Provides Insight into Early Population Structure in Eurasia

Yang MA, Gao X, Theunert C et al.

29033327 PubMed ID
11 Authors
10/23/2017 Published
1 Samples
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

YM
Yang MA
GX
Gao X
TC
Theunert C
TH
Tong H
AA
Aximu-Petri A
NB
Nickel B
SM
Slatkin M
MM
Meyer M
PS
Pääbo S
KJ
Kelso J
FQ
Fu Q
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

By at least 45,000 years before present, anatomically modern humans had spread across Eurasia [1-3], but it is not well known how diverse these early populations were and whether they contributed substantially to later people or represent early modern human expansions into Eurasia that left no surviving descendants today. Analyses of genome-wide data from several ancient individuals from Western Eurasia and Siberia have shown that some of these individuals have relationships to present-day Europeans [4, 5] while others did not contribute to present-day Eurasian populations [3, 6]. As contributions from Upper Paleolithic populations in Eastern Eurasia to present-day humans and their relationship to other early Eurasians is not clear, we generated genome-wide data from a 40,000-year-old individual from Tianyuan Cave, China, [1, 7] to study his relationship to ancient and present-day humans. We find that he is more related to present-day and ancient Asians than he is to Europeans, but he shares more alleles with a 35,000-year-old European individual than he shares with other ancient Europeans, indicating that the separation between early Europeans and early Asians was not a single population split. We also find that the Tianyuan individual shares more alleles with some Native American groups in South America than with Native Americans elsewhere, providing further support for population substructure in Asia [8] and suggesting that this persisted from 40,000 years ago until the colonization of the Americas. Our study of the Tianyuan individual highlights the complex migration and subdivision of early human populations in Eurasia.

Chapter III

Ancient DNA Samples

1 ancient DNA samples referenced in this publication

1 Samples
Sample ID Date/Era Country Locality Sex mtDNA Y-DNA
Tianyuan 38896 BCE China Tianyuan M B4'5* K-YSC0000186
Chapter IV

Analysis

Comprehensive review of ancestry and genetic findings

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Summary

Key Findings

Ancestry Insights

Traits Analysis

Historical Context

Scientific Assessment